By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | July 26, 2017
Trust Lacks Standing to Bring Claims on Life Policies; Assignment Notices Not Received
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | July 25, 2017
Arbitration of Disputes Cannot Be Compelled; Waiver of Collective Claims Violates NLRA
By Meghan Tribe | July 17, 2017
The Vocke Law Group, a small financial services and insurance firm founded late last year by former General Re Corp. general counsel Damon Vocke, has made its first new additions by bringing on two lawyers for its office in Stamford, Connecticut.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | July 14, 2017
Insurer Denied Injunction Barring MTA, NYCTA From Enforcing Performance Bond
By Josefa Velasquez | July 12, 2017
Insurance agents and brokers whose state licenses have expired can now apply for re-licensing online rather than go through the old paper system, the New York State Department of Financial Services announced last week.
By Christine Simmons | July 11, 2017
A former corporate client that Kasowitz Benson Torres earlier sued for unpaid legal fees is fighting back with a malpractice lawsuit alleging billing fraud, claiming it didn't receive legal services "commensurate with a law firm that represents the president of the United States."
By Michael Booth | July 7, 2017
An Eastern District magistrate judge has ordered the distribution of $5 million in insurance coverage to the families of three people who died and to 42 others who were injured when their tour bus overturned in Delaware.
By Marcia Coyle | July 6, 2017
The recent switch by the Trump administration's U.S. Justice Department from opposing to defending bans on class actions in workplace arbitration agreements will have consequences beyond a trio of challenges the U.S. Supreme Court is set to hear this fall. The government this week, citing the high court switch, said it will no longer defend a class action provision in the U.S. Labor Department's fiduciary rule.
By C. Ryan Barber | July 5, 2017
The Federal Trade Commission on Wednesday adopted an indemnity policy that will shield lawyers and other staff from any personal liability for enforcement actions that draw a lawsuit and expose them to a monetary judgment. The new policy comes as two FTC lawyers press for immunity, in court, over their roles in a data-breach case against the now-shuttered medical device company LabMD.
By newyorklawjournal | New York Law Journal | June 20, 2017
Deposition Sought Evidence Irrelevant To Validity of Policies' Disclaimer
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